Yes, I completely agree with that.
There are many opportunities for getting renewable fuels. I don't believe using food stocks that are for human and animal feed is the best way. Yes, we can get some fuel that way, but for the amount of corn that it takes to feed one person a 2,000-calorie-per-day diet for a whole year, you only get enough fuel from that to fill up your tank one time, and we burn it. That's food for people or for animals.
We can get a lot of renewable energy if we use forest stock, if we use grasses, if we use landfill waste. We don't have a big lobby group to generate interest and support for that policy. It will take a lot of money to that and we, as Canadian citizens, may well vote to do that—I would—and not touch our food and feed supply. We can use forest scraps, grasslands that are not being used for livestock feed, landfill, slaughterhouse remnants. All of those sorts of things--the food waste, the organic waste--generate biogas, which can be used for electricity. They're doing that all over Germany, Austria, and places in Europe.
I led a group of Canadians to look at many biogas plants in Bavaria and Austria two years ago. I think that's a good possibility, because it doesn't use food products, but it's expensive. And if we do that, it will cost.